
Ripple CTO David Schwartz breaks down the hidden risks buyers face when chasing private shares on secondary markets.
His six-point warning reveals how pricing, delays, and insider advantages can stack the odds against retail investors.
The message lands just as Ripple IPO speculation heats up again.
Rippleās latest $500 million share sale has stirred up fresh IPO chatter, but just as the excitement picked up, Ripple CTO David Schwartz stepped in with a reminder that buying private company stock, Ripple or otherwise, is not as straightforward as many think.
And he made his point with six clear risks investors often overlook.
Why Big Money Showed Up for Ripple
Rippleās recent round valued the company at $40 billion and drew in major names like Citadel Securities, Fortress Investment Group, Galaxy Digital, Brevan Howard, Pantera Capital, and Marshall Wace. These investors secured unusually strong protections.
They have āthe right to sell their shares back to Ripple after three or four years at a guaranteed 10% annual return,ā unless Ripple goes public before then. If Ripple wants to buy the shares back sooner, it must offer a 25% annualized return.
Add a liquidation preference on top, and itās clear this was a deal designed for safety.
Schwartz‘s Warnings
As users online began asking how to buy Ripple shares, some even wondering if they could use XRP, Schwartz responded with a neutral but firm explanation. This wasnāt about Ripple specifically, he emphasized. It was about the reality of private markets.
His first warning: pricing data is shaky. Secondary brokers āare notorious for giving you misleading (or even outright false) information,ā he said, explaining that even platforms like Notice and Hiive arenāt fully reliable.
He also noted that buyers are usually the only ones pushing for a fair price. Brokers earn more when the price rises, and sellers want the same outcome. āThe broker is not on your side,ā he said.
The Hidden Friction in Private Stock Deals
Schwartz pointed out that investors get almost no real company information, and most of the time, theyāre buying from insiders who naturally know more. Deals can drag on for weeks because of ROFR steps and company approvals. During that wait, the companyās outlook can shift, leaving the buyer stuck.
And then there are the fees: 5% charged to both sides. As Schwartz explained, buyers end up āpaying about 10% too much,ā even when everything else goes right.
IPO or Not, the Market Is Watching
Crypto fundraising has already hit $23 billion this year, boosted by a friendlier political environment. But recent listings havenāt gone smoothly – Circle and others that went public in 2025 have seen sharp declines. Ripple again stressed it has āno plan, no timelineā for an IPO.
Still, as long as Ripple keeps making moves that draw Wall Streetās attention, the IPO conversation wonāt go away. And Schwartzās message stands as a reminder: enthusiasm is fine but just know what you’re stepping into.
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FAQs
Ripple has stated it has “no plan, no timeline” for an IPO, despite recent investor interest. The latest funding round was a private share sale.
Buying private company stock like Ripple’s is complex and typically not open to the public. It involves secondary brokers, high fees, and significant risk.
Key risks include unreliable pricing data, high broker fees (often ~10% total), lack of company information, and long deal times that can lock you in.
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